On 10/14/2012 05:15 PM, Eddie G. O'Connor Jr. wrote:
On 10/14/2012 05:10 PM, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
On 10/14/2012 04:30 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 10/14/2012 01:01 PM, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
It is the ONLY user account on this system. Well other than root.
So, add another account and see if it's affected the same way.
That'll tell you whether the problem is somewhere in the system or
in your user profile.
If the new user account is affected, start looking in /var/log. Look
at the messages file to determine when the system last booted before
the problem began. Then look at yum's log to see what patches were
applied recently.
Let's see. On Oct 2 I did a large update then rebooted. Sep 23 was
the prior update.
Then on Oct 7 I installed Kismet to try and figure out my son's appt
wireless mess. Was not successful, and just switched to wired. But
Kismet is on the system still and the problems started shortly after
the install (on the 9th).
So how can I tell if Kismet server is running? I suppose unistalling
it might be wise.
Just my "two cents"?.....make sure there are no "dependencies" that
are attached to Kismet before you un-install it. I had a nightmare
situation where I had installed something (can't remember now....it
was between F12 & F14....I think!) and when I did the uninstall, and
that little window popped open telling me that there were dependencies
that would "go" along with the app I was ditching, I didn't notice
that there were some things on that list that I NEEDED.......long
story short....By F15 I was installing from scratch, because I was a
little too "quick" with the click-finger!
Been burned by that too. And as more in XP than Linux. The Kismet
plugins were installed as a dependency, so I will specifically uninstall
both.
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